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GENERAL INTEREST

Bruemmer, F. "Sea Hunters of Lamalera." Natural History 110.8 (Oct. 2001): 54–59. Marine hunters, taking mostly young sperm whales and whale sharks, follow ancient rules in an Indonesian island.

Clarke, W. M. "Pieces of History." Smithsonian 33.8 (Nov. 2002): 62–70. The salvage of the turret of the USS Monitor reveals details about the lives of sailors who perished in the sinking of the Civil War's most famous ship.

Landman, N. H., P. M. Mikkelsen, R. Bieler and B. Bronson. "Columbus's Pearls." Natural History 110.8 (Oct. 2001): 12–14. The discovery of rich beds of pearl oysters in the New World triggered their exploitation, and a new wave of exploration in the sixteenth century.

Oeland, G. "Secret Weapon of the Confederacy." National Geographic 202.1 (July 2002): 82–101. The wreck of the H L Hunley, the first submarine to sink an enemy warship, is raised.

Rust, S. P. "The Garífuna." National Geographic 200.3 (Sept. 2001): 102–113. The inhabitants of fishing villages along the Caribbean coast of Central America, the Garífuna, struggle to keep to their unique culture.

Steinberg, H. "Last Voyage of the Slave Ship Henrietta Marie." National Geographic 202.2 (Aug. 2002): 46–61. The wreck of a slave ship off the coast of Jamaica provides details of slave trade at the end of the seventeenth century.

IN DEPTH

Bandaranayake, W. M. "Traditional and Medicinal Uses of Mangroves." Mangroves and Salt Marshes 2 (1998): 133–148.

Dzidzornu, D. M. and S. B. Kaye. "Conflicts Over Maritime Boundaries: The 1982 United Nations Law of the Sea Convention Provisions and Peaceful Settlement." Ocean Yearbook 16 (2002): 541–607.

Johannes, R. E. "The Renaissance of Community-based Marine Resources Management in Oceania." Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 33 (2002): 25–47.








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